Arbor Villa (1882-1931) was the name of the large estate owned by Frank M. “Borax” Smith, in Oakland, California.

Oak Hall Mansion

Oak Hall mansion, grounds and greenhouse on the Arbor Villa estate 1Arbor Villa estate as seen from across Park Boulevard 1
(compare to current view on WhatWasThere.com)

Oak Hall was the name of the mansion on the Arbor Villa estate, a gorgeous, extravagant three story home with at least 42 rooms, including 15 bedrooms; a ballroom; a bowling alley including a ball return; an organ with 18 or more ceiling-height pipes; an attached conservatory; and even a miniature grotto.

Oak Hall was built between 1893–1895 for $275,000 (roughly $7M in 2011 dollars), and was designed by architect Walter J. Mathews,

The Grounds

With so much emphasis on the house, were the grounds an afterthought? Hardly. Squadrons of full-time gardeners had already extensively groomed the 35-acre estate for over a decade before the house was even built. Not for nothing was it called Arbor Villa: there were grape and rose arbors; groves of birch and pine; a large lily pond, a cactus garden … exotic trees and flowers at every turn. The grounds also featured tennis and croquet courts; a paddock with deer and rabbits; a fountain; an archery range; stables; several greenhouses; a 5-story faux water tower with observation deck, and a variety of guest houses and other structures.

Part of Oakland Life

From 1895 until the 1920s the Smiths opened Arbor Villa to the public fairly regularly, holding numerous fundraising events and society balls, which generated vast sums for charitable causes (like Oakland Free Kindergarten, or Fabiola Hospital). These events, especially in the early years, were the place to be. A San Francisco Call article (Vol. 105, #153, 2 May 1909) describing one such May Day fundraiser, mentions familiar names from Oakland history: de Fremery, Remillard, Chabot, Capwell, Schilling.

The most brilliant affair of the week of course was the reception which Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Smith gave on Wednesday evening at their charming home, Arbor Villa, in East Oakland, to which over 1300 guests from both sides of the bay were bidden.

A Tribune article from the same year was titled “society queens rule at Smith grand ball.”

The End

Smith made and lost at least two fortunes over the years, so he was used to some turmoil. But in 1928, Smith suffered a series of strokes. Evelyn took control of the business affairs, and they gave up Arbor Villa and moved to Adams Point. The grand Oak Hall was torn down, though some fixtures were saved. As a publicity stunt, the observation tower was burned.

The Dooley 1902 photos (all of the above interior views, and most of the outside ones) are usually what gets jaws dropping and people talking, especially when you visualize all this superimposed on the area as it is today. Note that this year’s OHA tour of Arbor Villa, led by Phil Bellman, is this Saturday, July 13, 10 am-12:30 pm.

Questions/Answers:

Who decided to tear Oak Hall down? — Who else … real estate developers! They even burned down the observation/water tower as a publicity stunt. I imagine I’m not alone in detecting an element of class-based “payback” in the apparent vengeful glee with which this task was conducted, plus the lack of record of any formal opposition to it. (Infuriatingly, these were the same developers who for years had used proximity to Arbor Villa to sell nearby tracts at a premium.)

Why was Arbor Villa not turned into a museum with park grounds like the Dunsmuir Hellman House? – (I know, right?) Places like D-H or Hearst Castle were somewhat protected by out-of-the-way locations, whereas Arbor Villa’s being situated strategically so close to Oakland’s heart made it a sitting duck, unable to resist developers’ depredations. After the 1929 crash, no buyer could be found for any house that big (anyone with enough money having long since absconded to Piedmont) plus the city of Oakland was still decades away from any preservational awareness. But if any structure in Oakland ought to have been spared … it was called “Oak Hall” for a reason, you know: no expense had been spared in paneling each room in a different exotic wood (for example, IIRC the downstairs central lobby – overseen by Bernard Maybeck – was done entirely in koa) – and the hallways, done in oak, tied everything together. (And not paper-thin veneers, either – we’re talking ¾-inch slabs of the most select grades available. The building really should’ve been sold to the Gibson guitar company!)
The Ivy Hill area is kinda bouncing back now, but was always the hood when I was growing up. Now, try to imagine if you will, an alternate history – in which the City of Oakland had somehow had the foresight to retain Arbor Villa (if only as a thank-you to someone who’d handed them, oh, I dunno, a private orphanage system … a transportation infrastructure … various large public works … to name a few). Having a big castle on the hill – even if only used occasionally for private functions or city administrative offices – might well have exerted enough influence, over time, to have kept the whole area from ever becoming ‘hood. Food for thought …

Check out this obit for Borax’s last surviving daughter. It says the house was torn down in 1932, a year after Borax died. I did a bit of searching on NewspaperArchive.com, and couldn’t find an article about the demolition, but I did find ads from the time period for homes in the subdivision known as "Arbor Villa, Borax Smith-Home Place," and a map was apparently filed on 10/15/31. (See the pix below) My guess is that the family started selling off pieces of the property before Borax died. — NAParish

You guessed right. What’s more (as we’ll no doubt hear in more detail on Saturday), to make ends meet (especially after the events of 1913), the Smiths had been forced to sell off big chunks of Arbor Villa while they still lived there. It’s already such a sad tale, I’ve been omitting details, but in Smith’s biography it’s mentioned how the old man, now mute after a stroke, would twitch at the sound of his beloved trees being felled outside … knowing the vultures are circling can’t be good for anyone’s health! Anyhow, yes, the demolition proceeded in stages. I even know of one c. 1931 photo showing the house still in place … but completely surrounded by apartments and whatever else is there now. It’s too depressing to post, but I think the Oakland Museum has it (mislabeled, with bad metadata).